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Abacus wrote:This is so strange, because I've played the 21 foot rule as a gunman against a knife wielding opponent, and I have never seen the knife not get five rounds in him before closing the distance. Now, the knife guy was no Olympic sprinter, but he was an athlete and I'm no ninja, but I maybe am better trained than an average person. Having seen it play out already, I'll totally take the draw on that.
What I need to find out is what is the distance the I CAN'T beat him at ....
JamesCannon wrote:I think he's also forgotten more about spelling and grammar than ... well it just seems he's forgotten a lot about it.
DannusMaximus wrote:Few things are more win than saving the day with something that other people think you're weird for hauling around.![]()

Power Fail wrote:That's a lot different then walking out of a restaurant, turning the corner, and a guy screaming "GIVE ME YOUR MONEY!" with his knife in your face. Or even just going about your daily activities, going to the ATM (I know, I know, who uses those anymore, but still), and a guy starts walking up on you quicker than normal. You can't just draw on everyone that gives you the creeps, but by the time he reveals his attack, he's already too close to you. Like Phil said, rare will be the occasion that someone paces off 21 feet, pulls out a nice, obvious Bowie knife, screams to get your attention, then blindly charges you like a bull.
The key concept in all of this is "ambush."
tireiron wrote:I've got eleven years of martial arts in me, teach part time at the home school.
I've also been stabbed.
Knife in my face? I'm going for my CCW every time.
Not that I won't be kicking, blocking with my free hand/arm, and backing up as fast as I can, but all the weapon sparring in the world can not begin to simulate the immediacy of bladed weapons.
Consider the fade-away jumpshot: when things get too ugly at the top of the key, make yourself some room to work...
My google-fu is weak, but Mas Ayoob's books tend to illustrate this principle well. He advocates training to draw and fire with one hand, in case your other is busy keeping a bad hombre at bay...
JamesCannon wrote:I think he's also forgotten more about spelling and grammar than ... well it just seems he's forgotten a lot about it.
DannusMaximus wrote:Few things are more win than saving the day with something that other people think you're weird for hauling around.![]()

tireiron wrote:I've got eleven years of martial arts in me, teach part time at the home school.
I've also been stabbed.
Knife in my face? I'm going for my CCW every time.
Not that I won't be kicking, blocking with my free hand/arm, and backing up as fast as I can, but all the weapon sparring in the world can not begin to simulate the immediacy of bladed weapons.
Consider the fade-away jumpshot: when things get too ugly at the top of the key, make yourself some room to work...
My google-fu is weak, but Mas Ayoob's books tend to illustrate this principle well. He advocates training to draw and fire with one hand, in case your other is busy keeping a bad hombre at bay...
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

phil_in_cs wrote:Again guys, this is a very simple thing to experiment with your buddies. Get a marker like a sharpie for the knife, and a blue gun or air soft. Start at mugging distances (arm's reach) and see what happens.
Vicarious_Lee wrote:This guide is created to help you get a spoon and eat my ass:
First: Get a spoon.
Second: Eat my ass.
KnightoftheRoc wrote:I can't believe that it took till page three, before anyone mentioned backing up as he attacks- it not only keeps the distance between you as large as possible, for as long as possible, it also gives you time to draw. Granted, you're not going to out run him while going backwards, but if looneytunes-with-the-knife comes rushing at me, I'm gonna be backpedaling like I just walked in on my grandparents having sex. If only to give myself some reaction time.

DrunkWookiee wrote:Great video on the subject here.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0fPL4f3 ... 1&index=24
At 1:54 Gun Guy completely fumbles his draw and Knife Guy finishes him off.


DrunkWookiee wrote:Backpedling is BAD. An attacker can move faster and farther, moving forward, than you can moving backward.
The example of the guy backpedling and FALLING DOWN in Gabe Suarez's video is a great example of this.
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

KnightoftheRoc wrote:DrunkWookiee wrote:Backpedling is BAD. An attacker can move faster and farther, moving forward, than you can moving backward.
The example of the guy backpedling and FALLING DOWN in Gabe Suarez's video is a great example of this.
I won't disagree with this, but to me, standing still is worse. I'd rather take my chances backpedaling, or better yet, a side stepping movement, than standing there. Regardless of what weapon you are having to fight back with, you will need time to draw it, assuming you were attacked without warning (outside of a classroom, is there any other kind?), and a few steps could buy you that time. Perhaps 'Backpedaling' was a poor choice of wording, but suffice to say, movement equals distance, and distance equals time- not a lot of it, but some, maybe enough.
phil_in_cs wrote:Circumstances will dictate which direction you will go, but you're correct that you're likely to fall if you try to back step. If you do need to move back, you have to get your hips rotated so your feet are moving forward while you disengage/defend with your torso back to the attacker.
Moving straight back IS your natural response, and since it is a problem, you need to train yourself to do something else. Assuming no great size/strength disparity, moving to the outside of the striking arm is your best bet. You can block him inwards, and push his shoulders to turn his back to you so that you can draw your pistol and contact shoot him in the head.
That doesn't always work - at the Suarez class, on some of the knife defense drills my partner/attacker was a strength coach at a university. Trust me, you don't push a guy that can dead lift 500lbs very far. He was pretty quick too, on the football lineman explode off the snap type.
vyadmirer wrote:Call me the paranoid type, but remember I'm on a post apocalyptic website prepared for zombies.

darkaxel wrote:One of my weapons instructors (A total mall ninja. I had to attend as part of my security guard training) once advised us to sidestep away from the attacker on his weak side (i.e. If a man has a knife in his right hand, step to his left so he has to reach across his body to strike you with the knife) I'm not quite sure of the reasoning behind this, as his explanation was drowned out by many yawns and the attentions of an attractive co-worker I was interested in having relations with.

tireiron wrote:
Training (as opposed to yawning) will help you find the options that work for you.
vyadmirer wrote:Call me the paranoid type, but remember I'm on a post apocalyptic website prepared for zombies.

darkaxel wrote:tireiron wrote:
Training (as opposed to yawning) will help you find the options that work for you.
In my defense, the instructor actually claimed to be a ninjitsu master during his introduction (the guy was three hundred pounds of pure flab), and the co-worker I was flirting with was very attractive.
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

KnightoftheRoc wrote:darkaxel wrote:tireiron wrote:
Training (as opposed to yawning) will help you find the options that work for you.
In my defense, the instructor actually claimed to be a ninjitsu master during his introduction (the guy was three hundred pounds of pure flab), and the co-worker I was flirting with was very attractive.
+1 to the training
I am always leery of anyone who refers to themselves as a master- to me, that is a title that should be conferred by others of that level. Did he have any kind of documentation to that effect? Also, a martial arts 'master' who has let himself go to that extent? Sounds fishy to me, content of the training aside. Generally, teachers of something as physical as a martial art (pick your flavor) tend to pay particular attention to physical fitness. I've met some who were as wide as a wall, but it was a SOLID wall, not a flabby one.
vyadmirer wrote:Call me the paranoid type, but remember I'm on a post apocalyptic website prepared for zombies.

darkaxel wrote: In my defense, the instructor actually claimed to be a ninjitsu master during his introduction (the guy was three hundred pounds of pure flab), and the co-worker I was flirting with was very attractive.



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